I'm using Entity Framework to create my data objects. Here's what my designer.cs file looks like:
namespace MyApp.WebUI.Models
{
...
[EdmEntityTypeAttribute(NamespaceName="MyAppDBModel", Name="AddressType")]
[Serializable()]
[DataContractAttribute(IsReference=true)]
public partial class AddressType : EntityObject
{
...
}
...
}
I have a file called Validation.cs in which I want to keep all my validation for my entities. Here's what it looks like:
namespace MyApp.WebUI.Models
{
public class Validations
{
...
[MetadataType(typeof(AddressTypesValidation))]
public partial class AddressType
{
}
public class AddressTypesValidation
{
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Address Type name is required.")]
[StringLength(50, ErrorMessage = "Address Type name must be 50 characters 开发者_StackOverflowor less.")]
public string Name { get; set; }
}
}
}
I have this in my view page:
<% Html.EnableClientValidation(); %>
<% using (Html.BeginForm("Edit", "AddressTypes", FormMethod.Post)) { %>
<div class="editor-label"><%: Html.LabelFor(m => m.Name) %></div>
<div class="editor-field">
<%: Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Name) %>
<%: Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Name) %>
</div>
<input type="submit" value="Save" />
<% } %>
But my validations aren't loaded. If I try to submit the form with no value for Name, I get an error message saying The value '' is invalid.
instead of my error message.
What am I doing wrong?
There is a fundamental flaw with your approach. It is generally understood that using your database objects as view models and having Mvc do its model binding on them is a very bad idea.
Darin has a great answer detailing the issues associated with using domain objects in views.
I think your issues are being caused because you're mix data objects with view models, and to quote Darin
About 60% of the question I am [Darin] answering on StackOverflow in the asp.net-mvc tag wouldn't have been asked if the OP have used a view model.
I'm not sure if you can have a partial class then have another partial class that is a nested class. Try having the partial you've declared not be a nested class.
Edit: Just ran a quick test in VS (not the validation part) and you can't one part of a partial class in a nested type and have another part of the partial class as a non-nested type (or nested in a different type).
I may be off the mark here, but I believe that the Required
attribute simply means 'not null', and your StringLengthValidator
is only checking for an upper bound. It's not failing because you are sending through a string - unfortunately it's the String.Empty
.
You're using the overload
[StringLength(int upperBound, [Parameters])]
Instead, try
[StringLength(int lowerBound, int upperBound, [Parameters])]
something like this, if you want minimum length of 1:
[Required(ErrorMessage = "Address Type name is required.")]
[StringLength(1, 50, ErrorMessage = "Address Type...")]
public string Name { get; set; }
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